Nope just tried it out and it worked just fine.
(*Chris*)
On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 2:14 PM Maria Elena ringmeiste...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 5:40 PM, Chris Pratt thechrispr...@gmail.com
wrote:
Yes, I have it working just fine on Java 8. But, I can't seem to get it
working
Wouldn't adding (stage\.)? to each host-alias-regexp and changing the
host-name to regexp allow it to work as you want it? For example:
host regexp=(stage\.)?latencyzero.com root-directory=/lz/var/www/
com/latencyzero
host-alias-regexp^tycho.(stage\.)?latencyzero.com[\.]?$/host-
Check your web.xml. You're probably sending /* or /service/* to your
servlet, which means YOU have to handle serving the CSS files. If you'd
rather let Resin handle those, try using /*.jsp or /service/*.jsp (or
something more specific to your situation).
(*Chris*)
On Mon, Apr 8, 2013 at 8:08
Well, yes and no. As I understand the problem, it really got bad around
the Java 5 timeframe because of the addition of Enumerations to the
language. What Resin does (and all auto-reloading Java containers do) is
to create a ClassLoader that contains all the code for your application.
When it
Basically everything that is put into the session must be Serializable is
you have the distributable/ element in web.xml. If you don't have that
setting then it shouldn't be required.
(*Chris*)
On Sep 23, 2011 4:00 AM, Alan Wright alan.wri...@athenesystems.com
wrote:
Hi
We are in the
I just installed 4.0.19 and I'm seeing lots of slow alarm's just like are
mentioned in bug
http://bugs.caucho.com/bug_view_advanced_page.php?bug_id=4291 is there a way
to work around this but, or should I back off and try 4.0.18? If there's
anything you need to help solve this problem, just let
I definitely don't know for sure, but that strikes me as a duplicate jar
problem. You might look at what new jars were introduced in 4.0.14 and see
if you are duplicating any of them in your WEB-INF/lib directory.
(*Chris*)
On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 7:49 AM, Aaron Freeman
Consider this another vote for a possible switch to using SLF4j as the Resin
logging interface. It's a very thin API that is an extremely powerful
aggregator of log information.
(*Chris*)
On Fri, Apr 2, 2010 at 12:57 PM, Jeff Schnitzer j...@infohazard.org wrote:
I'm pretty sure that it's